Hi - it is sort of a different approach to narrative theory. There are parallels, of course: a homodiegetic narrator would be a first person or third person limited narrator in the terminology I use in this video. A heterodiegetic narrator would be a third person unlimited, omniscient narrator. Hope that helps a little!
@@MrVEnglischundSport I can agree with the overview of "narration" in the video (well done!), but in my view this response to the issue of "focalization" misses the point. Focalization pertains to the literal or mental point-of-view adopted. Often the narrator is simultaneously the focalizer, but things get complicated as well as interesting when a narrator delegates focalization to a character (who may or may not be a narrator him/her/+ self) -- and the (first) narrator may be mistaken about, or biased toward, or plainly ill-disposed to the character via which this narrator focalizes. This means that we cannot automatically trust the version the narrator presents of the character's experience (most of the time: = visual, aural, mental perspective) of the story world. The possibility that the narrator is wrong will typically not play a role in the case of an omniscient narrator (whose judgment can after all be trusted), but it will occur often in the case of a character-narrator who attributes focalization to another character. "In "John said that Marguerita had seen a UFO.," John (= narrator) may be wrong, or lying about the experience of Marguerita (= focalizer). The possibility that John is wrong (by no means rare in stories) makes the situation more complex as well as more intriguing. Can we, as readers, trust John to be right about Marguerita? If he is not right, what is the reason of this? But the complexity can become even greater if there is a string of narrators and/or focalizers, e.g, in "Mary heard that John said that Marguerita had seen a UFO." A little bit of this complexity is captured in a short animation film on "narration and focalization" that was made by students of HKU in Utrecht and supervised by me. It can be found at th-cam.com/video/CLjcVHfDwWk/w-d-xo.html For those truly interested in the intricacies of narration and focalization, their interrelations, and the intriguing phenomenon of "free indirectness," I take the liberty of pointing to my paper on these issues with reference to comics, forthcoming in Pragmatics & Cognition 30(1) (2023).
@@charlesforceville A bit of self-promotion, lol But thank you so much. It is incredibly interesting. And you're right, he really did miss the point. It's so great that people like you exist and share your knowledge with the world. :)
Hi professor I'm studying English in college and we have a module called Guided reading, and I have no idea from where to start I don't understand anything.what advice would you give me? I really hope that you reply to me because exams are by the end of this month🙏🏻
Es ist 23 uhr. Konnte eif nd lernen, weil ich mich nd konzentrieren konnte. Jetzt guck ich mir dieses video an für die Klausur die ich morgen schreibe👍 mal gucken wie viele Punkte ich kriege
Einen Abend vor der Abiturprüfung lernen - lieben wir! 🎉
Es ist 23 30 und ich hab morgen eine Klausur für die ich Nix gelernt hab danke dir Bro
I love the way you teach go ahead mr
Am Freitag Englisch Abi LK😂❤ danke sehr
Same, hab gestern angefangen zu lernen 😂
@@alan05.a ich noch zwei tage davor als du also auch nicht sehr früh wie alle einfach übertreiben 😂
Hänger
@@maroc467l wann hat dein arsch angefangen?
@@maroc467l wieso? Du Streber
Morgen Englischabi 😅😅 heute lernen das wird wild
Wie war’s?
@@user-ze1nk2yw3m gut habs gefreestyled. 6 Punkte dadurch erreicht
viel glück für morgen leute
Could you help me understanding the focalisation, focaliser, and how can be found in a story?
Hi - it is sort of a different approach to narrative theory. There are parallels, of course: a homodiegetic narrator would be a first person or third person limited narrator in the terminology I use in this video. A heterodiegetic narrator would be a third person unlimited, omniscient narrator. Hope that helps a little!
@@MrVEnglischundSport I can agree with the overview of "narration" in the video (well done!), but in my view this response to the issue of "focalization" misses the point. Focalization pertains to the literal or mental point-of-view adopted. Often the narrator is simultaneously the focalizer, but things get complicated as well as interesting when a narrator delegates focalization to a character (who may or may not be a narrator him/her/+ self) -- and the (first) narrator may be mistaken about, or biased toward, or plainly ill-disposed to the character via which this narrator focalizes. This means that we cannot automatically trust the version the narrator presents of the character's experience (most of the time: = visual, aural, mental perspective) of the story world. The possibility that the narrator is wrong will typically not play a role in the case of an omniscient narrator (whose judgment can after all be trusted), but it will occur often in the case of a character-narrator who attributes focalization to another character. "In "John said that Marguerita had seen a UFO.," John (= narrator) may be wrong, or lying about the experience of Marguerita (= focalizer). The possibility that John is wrong (by no means rare in stories) makes the situation more complex as well as more intriguing. Can we, as readers, trust John to be right about Marguerita? If he is not right, what is the reason of this? But the complexity can become even greater if there is a string of narrators and/or focalizers, e.g, in "Mary heard that John said that Marguerita had seen a UFO." A little bit of this complexity is captured in a short animation film on "narration and focalization" that was made by students of HKU in Utrecht and supervised by me. It can be found at th-cam.com/video/CLjcVHfDwWk/w-d-xo.html
For those truly interested in the intricacies of narration and focalization, their interrelations, and the intriguing phenomenon of "free indirectness," I take the liberty of pointing to my paper on these issues with reference to comics, forthcoming in Pragmatics & Cognition 30(1) (2023).
@@charlesforceville A bit of self-promotion, lol
But thank you so much. It is incredibly interesting. And you're right, he really did miss the point. It's so great that people like you exist and share your knowledge with the world. :)
What about the "third-person objective/observer narrator"?
It's part of the third-person limited narrator, a sub-category so to speak.
I know that it is a bit offtopic, but is Mr.Tom heatlhy? Greetings from Germany
Thanks a bunch!
Are you German or American? Best wishes from the English Grundkurs from Sk.
German, but I lived in the US for a year and in Canada for more than a year 🙂
Nett hier
Aber Sind sie schon mal Gülle gefahren ?
you sound like jeremy fragrance!
I had to look this up😅 Thanks
Hi professor I'm studying English in college and we have a module called Guided reading, and I have no idea from where to start I don't understand anything.what advice would you give me?
I really hope that you reply to me because exams are by the end of this month🙏🏻
Rip
do you know frau andernach?
I might ;-)
Do u know Frau stratmann
Gibt es einen Unterschied zwischen Narrative techniques und narrative perspective
Ja
Narrative perspecitve beschreibt wie der Erzähler auf das Geschehen blickt und narrative techniques wie die Geschichte erzählt wird
@@user-wu5dm6ej2y gibt es irgendwo ein video wo die techniques erklärt werden? ich brauche da hilfe sehe aber nur videos zu perspective.
Es ist 23 uhr. Konnte eif nd lernen, weil ich mich nd konzentrieren konnte. Jetzt guck ich mir dieses video an für die Klausur die ich morgen schreibe👍 mal gucken wie viele Punkte ich kriege
Update ?
@S______0 mein Lehrer ist jetzt im vaterschaft deswegen haben wir die klausuren nd zurückbekommen.. aber die klausur lief gut
Morgen Abi